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What I learned from winning the Cup with my team

November 24, 2010 By Chris Corrigan Collaboration, Leadership, Organization One Comment

Team White and Team Black following the Cup Final

Last Friday night, beneath the lights on the Bowen island football pitch, my co-ed soccer league team won our Cup Final 5-0.  We played the best team in the league for the Cup and although were prepared for a tight game. we were rather stunned with the result.  What happened far exceeded our expectations of what was possible.  We played unbelieveably well.

Football (I use the global term for “soccer” here) is a team game that is much like other team games in life.  It features constrained action, bounded and with a purpose.  It requires different people to perform different roles, sometimes at a distance from each other and it requires tremendous levels of improvisation to deal with the flow and constantly changing conditions.  At the best of times it is an easy game to play but a hard game to play well, and it is an incredible game when your team plays out of its skin as we did on Friday.  In my work life I work with some pretty good teams, especially with my friends in the Berkana Collaborative with whom I have tight and deep relationships.  But playing on a football team for an hour or so gives one a clear and bounded sense of the possible, and I have been harvesting some of the key elements that went into making up my peak experience.

1. Train and learn together. It should go without saying that a team that does not train or learn together is not going to create an incredible experience right out of the box.  A foundation of basic skills is essential.  You have to know how to do the elementary things that you are being asked to do.  None of us on the team are professionals, although some of us have had good coaching in the past.  And because this is a recreational league we didn’t do much in the way of training together apart from on game days.  But on game days we always arrived quite early and worked on skills, worked on patterns and ran some basic passing, shooting and team drills to get us in the mood for the game and to learn a little.  Practicing and training together, in a positive spirit of encouragement and curiosity is a fundamental basis for good collaboration.  We were never critical with each other, and always helped each other learn to do things we hadn’t been able to do before.  In this way I think we all grew a little during the season.

2. Be friends. You are not going to perform anything near well if you don’t like each other.  A case in point is this year French World Cup footbal team.  A team of incredible invidiual talent, they ended up imploding, picking nfights with each other and going on strike with the result that they clattered out of the tournament’s early stages.  When he was interview on CNN about what was wrong with the French team, German great Jurgen Klinnsman said simply “they don’t like each other.”  You may think that being friends is a kind of kindergarten approach to getting things done but trying doing incredible work with people you dislike, distrust or haven’t forgiven.  Good luck with that.

3. Have an obvious purpose.  My friend Toke Moeller says that “purpose is the invisible leader.”  So it is.  On Friday our purpose was to win the game and the tournament.  That was what we were there to do.  We didn’t need a mission statement or a set of objectives.  We had a simple set of measureables, the most obvious of which was the difference in goals scored.  To acheive our purpose, we needed to score goals in their net and keep goals out of our net.  But as clear as our purpose was, it would also be fair to say that we had a clear plan, although it was not a very precise one – it was rather based on principles.  Basically we decided to attack on the wings, get past their midfield to where their defense was weakest and collapse our defenders on their forwards, denying them the centre of the field.  Given these straightforward tactics, which were concrete and easy to remember, execution was easy.  As a defender if I was playing too far outside, I could make a mental check in and move towards the middle.  If my partner was passing the ball up the middle I could remind her to get it up the wings.  We were able to adjust on the fly and feedback was welcome.  We played dynamic football, but committed to our roles and responsibilities.  We were able to be creative and supportive and flowing.

4. Communicate well and often.  Football, like basketball and hockey and other flow sports, moves and changes quickly.  Communication is essemtial.  In fact it may have been the difference between our two teams on Friday night.  We are chatty and talkative, communicating information to each other to alert players to threats, openings, available support, opportunities and options.  Sometimes the communication is subtle – a hand waving to indicate that you are open – and other times it is panic laden and full of passion and roar.  First and foremost it is clear and factual; second it is encouraging of stuff that is working; third it is helpful criticism to shift strategies or play a little differently.

5. Be aware of the whole field. This is another subtlety that separates good team from poor ones.  In collaborative activities there is very little room for people to collapse their focus down on invididual needs.  This awareness is a tricky thing to cultivate in an individualist culture, where we are rewarded for personal accomplishment.  On Friday I was spending a lot of time tightly marking Team White’s striker, a tough playing and talented Brazilian named Gelson.  For a lot of the match my focus was on him but the moment the ball was away from us, I could literally feel my awareness expand to contain the whole field.  It helped me to be able to suggest options to our midfielders as I was seeing things unfold from my back line position.  This total team awareness was perhaps the best indication that I was in a flow state all night.

6. Do your job and trust others to do theirs. Football is a great sport because you cannot do everything.  The division of labour means that you have to focus on your job, figure out ways to connect to others and trust them to run with what you offer them.   In football as in improv, the idea is to make your partners look good.  A well weighted ball from the back helps midfielders chase it down the pitch.  A good recovery from a rebound keeps your goalkeeper riding a clean sheet.  On Friday I chose the job of marking Gelson, which meant that I was not going to be anywhere near the opposing team’s goal.  No glory for me on the night except through the fact that we weren’t scored on.  If I could keep Gelson and the other strikers from having any chance on goal, it would be easy for me trust our strikers to slot goals, and that was just what they did.  It’s a relief not to have to do it all.  It conserves energy, allows me to focus and takes advantage of the good relations we have.

7. Be generous. I think more than anything else on Friday night, I learned that football is a game of generosity.  For the vast majority of the time, your job on a football pitch is to give and create.  In the improv world we call this “making offers.”  Generosity on the pitch means delivering useful passes, creating space by pulling your markers away from the action, helping support the play going forward by providing options so that we don’t give the ball away.  In football, greedy players are vilified unless they are of the absolute highest talent.  And even then, when they miss, especially when they had better options open, they are shunned.  A shunned team member is impossible to play with and in fact becomes a liability as they create a hole on the pitch and bad feelings that pervade the relationships on the team.  So generosity, gifting, creates the best teams.  A gift economy of attention, resources, and opportunities creates the conditions for shared glory and accomplishment.

These little learnings are perhaps elementary, but think about how difficult they are to execute in daily life.  In your organization, have you got these all right?  Is there something you AREN’T doing?  Are there elements of collaboration that you aren’t paying attention to?   And what other lessons should we glean from peak flow experiences in collaboration and team work?

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What books teach us?

November 23, 2010 By Chris Corrigan Being, First Nations, Learning One Comment

Johnnie Moore had an interesting thought this morning:

Jeff Jarvis talks about the  Gutenberg Parenthesis. Those who bemoan the supposed short attention spans of the networked generation, typically measure this by the capacity or willingness to read a book cover-to-cover. This assumes that reading books is normal; but what about the vast span of human history before books? Perhaps we’re seeing a reversion to ways of knowing that were diminished by the printed word… to a more oral culture in which remixing is natural.

This reminds me of the book,  The Alphabet and the Goddess which also suggests that reading had a powerful and not always positive effect on how we think and behave.

I left him my own thoughts…and I say this as a guy that loves books.
I think the issue is not attention spans so much as it is a breadth of attention.  Before there was text humans needed to be incredibly aware of context, of everything that surrounded them of how things worked and what initial conditions led to certain kinds of results.  This is important in agrarian societies, hunting societies, transoceanic travelling cultures and other kinds of indigenous land based ways of being.

What we have lost during the Gutenberg parenthesis I think is the ability to think systemically.  Book reading has taught us to be linear and to expect a beginning a middle and an end.  That is not the way the world works and I think we ignore it at our peril.

This is a little bit I think of what we will taste in our module at the ALIA Summer Institute this year.

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The day after Open Space

November 22, 2010 By Chris Corrigan Art of Harvesting, Art of Hosting, Collaboration, Open Space One Comment

One of the things I love about my mate Geoff Brown who lives in the lovely Airey’s Inlet, Australia, is his incredible willingness to be playful and creative in his facilitation work and especially in his harvesting work.  He is one of the few that gets how important the harvest is – at least as important as the hosting.  In this great post, Geoff shares his recent experience with Open Space and with a fantastic harvest that captures that creative brilliance of the group he was working with:  The day after Open Space

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The week’s tweets

November 21, 2010 By Chris Corrigan Notes

  • Dad makes pancakes on the BBQ when the power went out this am He was sad to bring them in when it came back on! http://yfrog.com/9dua6laj #
  • A crisp clear North Toronto fall morning which feels more like the early spring days of my youth in this neighbourhood. Old skin remembers. #
  • Maximizing the use of PVC in Thunder Bay http://yfrog.com/1ahgxkj #
  • The snows of November have come in earnest to Thunder Bay. Slowly rising in the dark and cold to prepare for an #openspace today. #
  • Early morning Thunder Bay. The city waits for winter and relishes the last spell of mild weather. Me, I'm off to Montreal. #
  • This flight from toronto to Montreal is full of the most serious, stressed out and fearful looking humans I have seen in a long time. #
  • The Montreal sunrise as seen from Dorval. The ancient mountain sits through another dawn, island washed by flow. http://yfrog.com/3w11kjj #
  • Light snow falling. A gentle morning back at home. http://yfrog.com/eod18bj #
  • Just because the world needs to see this again today. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kKnY8tBLG3g&feature=youtube_gdata_player #
  • Last night my beloved and i won our Bowen Coed Soccer League final 5-0 along with our fab teammates. One of the best collective flows ever. #
  • A fierce Squamish last night knocked the power out but it all blew all the snow away. #
  • Big Squamish blowing http://post.ly/1E2LC #
  • RT @paulrickett: ATTN Bowen: U need to turn things off, the instant draw when Hydro turns circuits back on overloads them and takes us down #

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Plane gripped by fear

November 18, 2010 By Chris Corrigan Being 5 Comments

Yesterday I was on a commuter flight from Toronto to Montreal. For those of you not in North America, these two cities are the biggest two in Canada and the flight is full of corporate looking people who are wearing ties, nice trench coats, shiny shoes, power rim glasses, and carrying leather portfolios. In short it was a flight of business travellers, mostly men, mostly white.

What struck me as I watched people coming on was how grim everyone looked. Everyone looked deadly serious. They were quiet, travelling alone for the most part and quickly avoided making eye contact with others. It seemed as if most people coming on were worried or fearful. It was as if people were moving with a kind of forced confidence but what was so clear from the outside was how afraid everyone seemed to be of appearing to make a mistake.

At one point a man sat down next to me after expertly throwing his rollaway into the overhead bin. He mumbled a forced “good morning” without looking at me and then cracked open his newspaper. A minute later a woman appeared and showed him her boarding pass which indicated that he was sitting in her seat. The man looked mortified, stuttered out an apology to me actually tried to defend himself and justify his mistake and very nervously and clumsily moved across the aisle.

I was filled with a wave of sadness in that moment. I wanted to say to him “Hey, I won’t be the one that yells at you today for that little mistake.” I looked around the plane. People were so scared of making an error that everyone sat clenched in their seats quiet and grim. I was shocked…it became clear to me that some part of our society – let’s say “Corporate Canada” in this case – was gripped by fear. People actually looked traumatized or abused. They looked like people I know who are residential school survivors or who had survived a bad and abusive foster parenting situation. I can imagine them being yelled at for little things that have happened. It looked like the most risk averse group of people I have ever seen in one place. Risk averse because somehow each of them had paid a dear price fro sticking their necks out, a personal price.

The temptation to generalize is great. But let me say that most airports on a weekday morning during the fall and winter are full of faces like this. Business travellers, corporate sales managers, directors of HR, regional market analysts, associate finance directors, senior planning officers…all these middle management corporate positions staffed by people so full of fear that they shake with nervousness at the smallest mistake in their day.

I don’t work much in the corporate world, but maybe I should more. Maybe a little honest conversation, a little tolerance for exploration and creative problem solving, a little space opening could go a long way to softening the lives of those who wear a hard visage.

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